tv Extreme Climate Events Deutsche Welle July 16, 2022 9:15pm-10:00pm CEST
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many thanks. as a reminder of our top story, southern europe is suffering e record break in heath, waive firefighters in spain, france. portugal in greece are battling distracting far as blazes. the heath has killed hundreds of people. thousands more have had to leave del avenue, annette. sure, did of you documentary looking at how extreme weather events might developed in the future as well. coming up at the top of the our builds while websites d, w dot com for more and also visit our social media platforms feature. ah, his goal is establishing an order, she june ping, president of the global power china. any criticism of his regime and isn't it in the bud piece?
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part of a whole system which believes his time has come with china's president, she ging ping starts july 30th on dw the memories are still vivid. on may 29th, 2016 disaster struck the village of pounds back and south western germany. oh the cut us off herself. i literally watched the floss away from the debris, heading towards manning, the floor. we read it made a noise as well lunch and i couldn't figure out what it was exactly. then i realize how to help the whole house was shaking policy post mary hung cash film, the catastrophe unfolding in front of him to do it once in. it's in st, completely insane. before you know, the emergency services can't do any. this is not impossible,
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right now was out of the question. my god. se pounds bottle via financial kill. i was in shock. i couldn't even begin to process what i was saying. missed i know, although no lives were lost. the flood left, the village devastated. this is so terrible. i'm speechless of the mobile. people have never seen anything like it. a few years later, germany suffering the effects of a different kind of extreme weather. in 20182019 temperatures rose above 40 degrees celsius in the summer with no rain for months on end rivers tried up a disaster for the local environment and its inhabitants yacht and last year there was no rain full here in the region for more than 70 day hine. and then in summer
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2021. the, our valley in western germany was hit by flash flooding let's, as you looked at and all of a sudden we were confronted with issues that we'd always thought only affected somewhere else in the world. in places like bangladesh. dramatic, whether fluctuations have become commonplace. what does the future hold and what do we need to do to cope with climate change? ah ah, we begin our research and didn't have work in the home secretion. an idyllic spot at the foot of the stone via forest. on june 5th, 20215 weeks before the flooding in the eye valley, a summer storm reeked havoc here. the picturesque village was
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overwhelmed, and york and bowman's home was among the many destroyed. he and his wife, marianna, will never forget that day, a traumatic experience that's edged in their memory. the basement was completely flooded. the couple had only just finished renovating their home. and now had to start all over again from scratch. they own a heating installation business, so at least they could do a lot of the work themselves at near the rollers on the farthest, murphy up for if we just got everything finished in here, mom with 5 or 6 years ago, we'd fitted the house out with external thermal insulation for energy efficiency and switched from fossil fuels to an air to water heat pump in side. yet we done
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the garden too, and we're actually looking forward to concentrating on other things. agnes, i was low to that, make a lot of them. that was it wasn't to be after hours of torrential rain fall over the local forest hills, the village was hit by a deluge em i quickly. balloon doesn't come. i can't get the images out of my hand is i often look at the photos we took. it really got to me stuffed, ah, marian bomb and still can't believe what happened. the rhine and the most, and often burst their banks. that villages that are nowhere near major rivers shouldn't be at risk of flooding. local simply weren't prepared the bomb and still haven't gotten over the experience. bush answered on to host and i was terrified that the front door would break and the water would rush in. from upstairs, we could see the pressure building. we could see the door was starting to give way
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is an architect the into was guns or the water was up to here. this year is was they go through anti yard was under water here a little. nobody watched on winter book as situated in a valley in the hunts like mountains. the village is nestled in the stone by a forest, the source of the watcher that caused such damage. forest landscapes. how fast water storage capacity soaking up heavy rainfall like a sponge. but in recent years, this has no longer been happening as efficiently as it used to van had pound batter is in charge of the local forestry service. he and his colleague michael fake are going to show us what the problem is. with the flooding,
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invent up or can other religious down in the valley is linked to the state of the forest. it's increasingly try here where they're digging. even the beach trees are showing signs of drought. damage and beaches aren't usually very sensitive. it actually rained a lot in the summer of 2021, but how much rain that the ground actually absorb? what if soon transpires not much at all? with the up, you can see it's bone dry. what has child to become a long term problem? while she shifted donkey hutton, he and eric yawn in late last year. there was no rainfall here in the region for more than 70 days in the garage. can there cost alone area?
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it didn't rain for over a $100.00 days. yes. by the 1st of august 2021, there was still a deficit of over 250 liters per square meter meter. hard to imagine a given the use overall, whether it's fast, but it goes to show how severe the lack of rainfall has been in the last 3 years. gosh, last if it's either in and it's in yon in ellipse and that ion anchorage vaughn, as hon. back explains, there needs to be 2 months, a steady rainfall day and night to make up for the drought of recent years. he also says that the forest needs to be managed differently in the past water used to be trained from the forest these days he and his team are laying pipes and taking trenches in the zone fight in order to replenish the watershed and retained the water that collects on the logging roads, but the aim is to ensure it seeps into the ground across the forest instead of
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flowing into the valley and causing to watch or waste there to post their bank live out of your home yos their feet of better all here am the one vote back loy for de la. there are lots of stream, sir. in the soon vas idol. the elbow convey the grave and bark, and it was striking how quickly their water level was rose in just a short space of time here in the soon vault just when it rained a massive amount of water collected in a concentrated area, the equity. it was pretty frightening in its own boat wonder composite ispa was a song being seemed when the storm head, the forest couldn't absorb the torrential rain. the logging, roads were crippled and had to be rebuilt. now deeper trenches and larger pipes have been put in place to reroute heavy rainfalls to points in the forest where cans deep into the ground. yet i shall dammit dustbin. these are up, flush bits and patient couldn't. what that does is avert excessive ronald and allow
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groundwater to replenish lungs. i'm on the water is distributed slowly and steadily across the forest floor. i where it's absorbed, who causes in terms of the local ecosystem. it means there's enough water to sustain the forest as a natural resource. again, leaving squalid happenings as, as leaves from florida to fulfill it found had found better planning to upgrade the whole forest. this way. it's a small but significant way of helping to reduce the effects of extreme weather. the next up on our research trip is in northern germany. every year hamburg host the extreme weather congress. it brings together weather and climate researchers as well as environmental activists. the event aims to reach as many people as possible in the process, raising awareness of climate change and the need to act an urgent priority. not
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only from each rather just spend praga, but also politicians and the likes of mo. she play chief, one of germany's leading climate researchers. the 2021. congress was overshadowed by the events in the us valley can if we need chain mission, the choice isn't between more or less climate protection. that between proper radical, sustainable climate protection and climate disaster. that's where we are at the um, friday for future. yeah, there's fridays for future, i think. and in 2019, there was more discussion of the climate and the environment than there's ever been before. but in 20. 19 that same year before the pandemic hair toys, we also took more cruises and more flights than ever before. that there's a huge cognitive dissonance going on. and if we really want to get anywhere, then we need to have the courage to change. and tom, these are the, gets in the, the experts attending the event are unanimous. those drought and flooding will
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become increasingly common of the islands i to indies a talk. my father will be with us yet, so i told him after a law insane. on the one hand, there are protracted dry spells as we saw in 2018, 2019, and 2020. and these weren't balanced out. and there's always been the occasional dry year. but the about 3 in a row is conspicuous vilegas were done, and on the other hand just gave we can expect to see increasingly frequent storms and heavy rainfall. i'm very slow moving storms and flash flooding from that. in general, the weather is becoming more extreme, but that's the bottom line. i love to help. while we were at the congress, we heard about an ambitious research project looking at extreme weather in this way, be in mountains. 10 german research institutes are pulling their resources including cloud and precipitation radars and lasers in order to explore the complex processes that occur in the atmosphere. basic scientific research that allows them
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to better protect extreme weather events and their consequences. these scientists are waiting for stormy weather. this may be an abs or germany's main storm hot spot and storms are a key aspect of extreme weather. professor americans is a meteorologist with other laza trauma as i were going to blow up a balloon. so we'll be ready if a storm starts to breathe. gentlemen, we've already set up the probes. so now we're going to load the balloons in the car, 6 or 7 of them, fixed and then we'll drive right into the store. the balloons are filled with helium. they'll carry small probes into the clouds and will enable the scientists to observe. hale formation occurring during the storm. hill is a typical feet of extreme weather. the team are excited. the clouds are
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gathering after hours of waiting, they now need to act fast. before they head into the storm me here, quince visits, the lab to check the clouds activity. which direction are they drifting in and is the upwind or convection strong enough to carry the probes into the storm clouds with only georgia, like you saw doctor does when he convection and shows a powerful lift off. when the rain forms it falls. moral as vertical to the points where the up wind is basically it suppresses the op wednesday. so, and that means that the standard lifetime of a single cell is on average 30 minutes to an hour because it destroys itself as it was. he says, cup would get all that makes it all the more important to release the balloons in
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the right place at the right time. outside the storm cell is getting stronger. it's time for the scientists to launch their balloons. right here. positioned inside cuts the probe's measure temperature and air pressure, as the balloons drift upwards through the storm. precisely where hale storms are forming inside the clouds. mckerick once can follow the action in real time signal . we've got a signal. are we going to you 3 balloons, because the rains got worse and we hope they'll take off yet. i've got a signal off. we go one last on stop. have
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lisa and the probes are inside the clouds, taking the pulse of the storm as it were. you for you. what are your thought met life? i thought fortunately, we're not in the middle of the storms out. there are 5 centimeter hailstones coming down from the middle and then give our cars are good bashing on the top with. from here me here, concent his team can collect a wealth of useful data that will help predict extreme weather events. we're planning to visit him in his lab and class. we're in a few weeks time back inventor book. the bowman's are still dealing with the flood damage. it's the weekend, but instead of putting their feet up, they're hard at work trying to make their home livable again. juergen bowman is haunted by memories of last july, when a gaping hole suddenly appeared in his yard. and thought to form alcohol or wild if there was a power can't because all the sockets were under water lorne on. it was like being
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on a house boat or as well as of miles or so what exactly happened as i rather than i live by. i was back of omen. well this here is an old stream tunnel and there was so much pressure from underneath that he got pushed up with a self supporting structure. and when he got pushed up it one stone breaks off and the structure collapses. briscoe, a film shot on his mobile phone shows the thing called that resulted right in front of his house. i 1st law got employees have worked with a hole in the garden, got bigger on there now, solid wood garden bench, got pulled into the current, got turned in circles water and was washed away by them. that was the point when i said to my husband, roger, okay, now i'm frightened. my father rakish, ucsd through olive enamel offers one. it all disappeared into the whole of the lavonne of the hall. the chairs are terra cotta. ornaments of it all got washed
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away from her. what happened here was nothing in comparison to the disaster in the our valley actually rambled. there was some damage. it's bad, it's a problem, but at least no one was heart. gluck crank lynch, defrauded from the r valley floods in july 2021 claimed 133 lives with 700 people left injured and 42000 others also affected. they were among the worst bloods and german history in the space of just a few hours. it rained as much as it usually does. in months. the german meteorological service called it unprecedented. insurance company said it was the most expensive weather related incident in 50 years. was damages totaling an estimated 10000000000 euros.
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just climate change means that such events are likely to become more frequent. we meet upper geographers trauma, hug and camp, and theresa shed idle in the village of my shots and the, our valley. they are trying to establish the precise water levels that occur during the flooding. not easy, given that many of the water gauges along the river got swept away. experts rely on them to analyze and predict flood events. give us a standardized warden. what else? the a presidio highest warden had a little from his head which pianist from one country directly to water levels on the outflow far exceeded any flooding that happened since records began fivefold human. and you know, we haven't seen water levels like that in recent history. and, but if you look at the history of the, our valley, india. and you can see that in fact, these extreme events did occur. they were very rare,
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but not on known. overcome in 18 o 4, there was flooding in the our valley that caused similar damage. done obviously on a smaller scale because at that point to the valley was less built up top. that of piled on myself. nice little in about farm. here in my shows, the storms swept away a number of houses and destroyed the local train line. complete with most bridges, theresa title and tomas logan camp from the university of bon are using a fyodor light, surveying tool to measure maximum flood heights across the valley. it helps them identify precise watcher levels at precise geographical location. with the brown color of this facade shows just how far the washer road thomas southern camp has been researching the history of blood in the, our valley. for many years. this time, the watcher here with 10 meters higher than its normal level. the script
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a hope or soc is equal carton. the lesson, they can find the fisa falling in deutschland or, and they're all flawed. risk matters for all of germany's river hub. but clearly they've not been adequate latin vs on feel on the basis of these matters. there are plenty of places where you could reasonably decide to put up new buildings. who are these maps don't include historical flow, doesn't help us on the woods level record and that are available. they fact just 50 or 60 years out of my phone in that short time frame to reflect extreme. then it was, i say, extra emma? i grew up to bill, please maps has since been updated and now include historical data too. but what world climate change play in the our valley disaster was that the ultimate cause in the pond there, i would argue that this is gale of the flood is not necessarily climate change
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related. it's good. i think it in terms of the frequency. well, if it's in other words, how often such events occur, which ones are you could argue with changing weather conditions. does that mean the floods now occurring more frequently? and that's a consequence of climate changes. climate change increases the likelihood of such events occurring more frequently as demonstrated by a recent study conducted with the participation of the german meteorological service. yet the question remains. why is why they're becoming more extreme? we meet spend prayer at the weather center of germany's main public broadcaster some 35 forecasts are produced for weather bulletins here every day of our music to clear that job includes analyzing maps and figures not only the t v weatherman has observed that a number of weather phenomena have become increasingly common from the focus until here as much of it does as if the noise here is at 50, not went on. oh,
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okay. are yeah, no, he got tells us about the standing ways phenomenon, high pressure and low pressure. france that don't actually move. it explains the devastating storms and the r valley does dawn via an pounds, but it's highly uncommon for high and low pressure. france to be stationary. but it's become a feature of current weather patterns. i give it of us seed for dorms that move, distribute rain across a wide area, but if they don't move, the impact is concentrated in one place. so there's extremely heavy rainfall. conflict. if the high pressure front doesn't move than we have the high temperatures and drought, we saw in 2003 or 2018 implement. at the moment we're seeing more frequent standing waves and also more frequent stationary highs and love was to ease of use. so that's a hypothesis that's being investigated right now in law in scientific terms. it's not straightforward. the natural world is always complex,
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though i am far according to pick a climate change as exacerbating the frequency of standing waves of air meteorologist and storms researcher mac once agrees where meeting him at his research institute. ah, he said at the center dedicated to analyzing natural disasters, he and his team evaluate extreme weather events around the world. they were among the 1st to compile an overview of the scale of the i valley disaster and the damage it cost me here. cons shows us a map of the area based on satellite data and aerial images. he believes society needs to adjust to the prospect are frequent, extreme weather events. both the hum in deutschland,
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i extreme weather events occur in germany every year or so. there are floods, hail storms, winter storms, and vin will live with them and we have to live with them, isn't on the live. oh, and we have to be aware that they happen and know how to respond this, but we tend to ignore it as is typical in our society. and once we ignore things we don't like and, and, but that can be highly destructive for and then these disasters happened when done through other services or you know, it doesn't, const and his colleagues closely monitor the course. the consequences of these disasters. the aim is to figure out what we can learn from them, and in the meantime, to remain vigilant. let me verify in this icon as i was there via for this one, flanagan. ideally, these are events that canon should teach us lessons for the future is justified when floods occur. it's a mistake to say ok, there's been a flood. it won't happen again that soon. let's rebuild everything exactly the way
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it was. yeah. that's what's happening in the, our valley. it was, but we know now that places that were flooded are highly vulnerable. c, as in, as in they were fuel. don't let him just as hulcrum village like ordinance in the the all centerpiece in this cons i in statistics, don't tell us anything. then i have another flood could happen next year, or it could happen in 200 years time. i saw sancho. but what we do know is that if such an extreme weather event happens, again, casino, then certain spots such as in short on the our river will most certainly be flooded again. so if you wanna random than cancer, it overflowed at me here once. and his team have also analyzed the flash flooding and pound spot in 2016. at the time it was the most severe flooding scene in germany for decades. again, the cause was extremely heavy rainfall concentrated in one area. within 30
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minutes, the village was torn apart. miraculously no one died that many were left homeless. it also resulted in an unusually vast volume of flotsam and other debris. this quote, it's terrible as engineer from speechless because i've never seen anything like it . the reconstruction work still isn't finished. and for locals, the emotional scars have yet to heal may have hung harsh house steer the village through its darkest hour. the road to recovery has been strewn with obstacles and set back. hash has even encountered hostility. it's been a difficult few years. he's written a book about what happened and travels the country, giving talks on the environmental threads facing villages like pounds. bah, featuring images such as these
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is below resume. so to the images are so effect hankle from but they inevitably moved people deeply. image and i go, i and i taught isabel, you couldn't reach them the same way with words. makalya images are extremely powerful. when in march i was on the cortisol, we are still dealing with the consequences that the reconstruction work is ongoing shaw, 5 years later, we can't do everything at once and it'll take a few more years before we're done. system included, it's a long term process to them that we have to think in terms of dec out in his record . mr. has come out a little. we have to think about how to contain flooding. heart how to treat the
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ground, what to do to protect the places at higher altitude where there's heavy rainfall to her more water cycling smoke from the village is main. square was completely rebuilt. the mayor wants to show us other reconstruction work such as the new reinforced walls along the village stream. the reconstruction work has cost the village approximately 55000000 euros to date. outside the village, there are now massive debris traps along the narrow slope for a hunk harsh. this is the key element in the protection plan. the huge structure is designed to trap avalanches of debris pouring downstream by the all the thong who's o for folk off in the middle common reason to know about 50 meters upstream.
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there's another huge debris trap or know of cobra. what we have to do was was, and it's a long term project to start is try to hold back the water at the source is where the heavy rainfall occurs. so it could be a retention reservoir of this week, which is problematic up there. and it will be better if the water could see into the ground like one song as well to me, the best solution would be to stop farming practices and plant more trees and to improve seepage potential. while, if i've a bristle for seagal, smoothly cut off on the land, around pounds bar is extensively farmed field boundaries were removed. they could have helped contain watcher and there are fields and fields of corn. another detrimental factor because the crop tries out the soil as and so talk that are born, come even thus understood. all's names living are it. soil can't absorb water and
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that results in localized flooding. i like to compare it to baking, take down this, but imagine taking some flower and pouring milk on is that all the flour is the dry ground with the milk? the heavy rain won't, you'll be laughed with. is flower on the bottom and milk just floating on top and once you start needing and the bottom, in this case, the flower has been moistened with a little bit of milk. you can add more milk and it'll soak in better sides and aspect. we'd like to investigate further at the university of tree are researchers are finding out how trout changes, soil. an experiment is underway in the soil science department. the samples being examined to see how well they absorb water. they're born again from in a long shot. they were lung a type of butter. soil acts like a sponge in the landscape, storing water over a long period of time, and then gradually releasing it to plant to its surroundings,
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to lakes and rivers. extreme and extreme weather brought about by climate change has consequences. long enough, dry soil calls absorb water at the same rate. instead, water just runs off. it was leading to flooding and bodies of water and also to soil erosion of wouldn't have parked in as it was on the soil. scientists want to demonstrate how long a take the drop of water to steep into various soil samples. first they add a drop of blue colored water to completely dry soil. it takes a while for the trap of blue water to be absorbed. the soil is so try, it's become impermeable. got 2 more samples. what have you found out so far?
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come out of the soil. samples are very different. the dryness definitely plays a big role. that once good soil containing homeless is partially, it takes dave to moist in again a cross check clearly shows that so that isn't completely tried out. can still soak up watcher. but if you're a student wrote me canvas, will your noise gauthier noisy or yeah, on when i was a student in the eighty's and ninety's, we didn't see this kind of dry soap soil. it was unimaginable. but that's what we're dealing with now. the environmental research and as drop monitor ever shows the soil effects of up to 1.8 meters has dried out massively on and the rain for we are experiencing in 2021 is just about managing to replenish the top. so the water
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supply it needs to be done, but the sub soil is still parched by the drought of the last 3 years. i got one in one of the talk ny village, and i are try subsoil and flooding. not as contradictory as it sounds, according to the experience. the drought 2018 resulted in reduced harvests and millions of years worth of losses in germany's agricultural sector. rivers dried up, such as the ties them near fryeburg, which close from the black forest industry struggled with a shortage of raw materials and even gas was in short supply. the media was full of doomsday scenarios. yet man, and of man as his course and feel in my opinion, it's a mistake to focus on all the doom and gloom. when the media goes on about the apocalypse and his crisis and that crisis season, we end up so overwhelmed that we lose all our courage and think there's no point trying to do anything about it. what,
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when in fact there are so many groundbreaking projects is skipped. so feel like tom projected groundbreaking projects that prove we're not powerless against extreme weather, such as the limb spac organic farm on the done us back color range and highland fights founded by young people. but it relies on water and that's in short supply up here. jeanine harbor works to ensure the soil as as permeable as possible. so long as it can still absorb watcher akin with stand, extreme rainfall fluctuations, hudson hudson campus. you know that you are ok, stock a home in 2014. there was severe flooding hair in the region that caused millions worth of damage by the marshal back stream overflow. it could be the most of the areas around it. all agricultural feels that are competent and where the water can't see pin easily, and the soil is homeless deficient. moving on, flooding sweets away the entire top soil and entire villages are hit by mudslide
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offa buffington. the young organic farmers are planning to revitalize their land using a special technique. first, they analyzed local rainfall patterns. up in the blue line on the chart show in which direction the rainfall is likely to flow. shanina harbor and her colleague have drawn red lines where they plan to dig ditches that will help distribute the watcher across the farmland. this technique is called key line water management of as you can the book, but they're concerned about the amount of red in their chart which indicates just how dry the region is. ah, they're keen to show us how effective their strategy is against why they're extremes. first they used to how to take their ditches. before switching 10
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excavator they want to test how the key line water system works. they take their trenches with a slight gradient 1.5 percent to prevent large volumes of water from flowing too fast. oh i'll have him an experiment on efforts z and we conducting an experiment to illustrate how the water that a mass is during heavy rainfall. aventis can be distributed over the area and conceit into the ditches laid according to the killer line system. if instead of flowing down the slope guaranteed and causing flooding in the valleys and calmed on the to zang funding for an interval card water from the top, a graphical depression we're a collects could be diverted to the mouth. so where the ground is dr. office, google just doesn't do talking, spin owned jeanine harbor uses the water tank and
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a hose to stimulate heavy rainfall. come a mark. many flight, obviously rain as moth localize. but the experiment shows that the ditch absorbs the artificial down were as planned for the water. then flows along the key line towards the elevation. mm it looks simple, but it's an intelligent way for farming to adjust to the challenges of climate change. the heavy rain fall and drought don't just adversely affect rural regions. but urban areas to or says that cities and surrounding areas are very different because cities are built out at the close. daddy show that heat waves in the likes of colona frankfort line. make them 9 degrees hotter than surrounding areas of cities such as cosgra are also likely to
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see a significant increase in temperature. that's when this poses an additional problem . dam. it effectively makes the city a completely different climate zone. so we need to think about how we can make cities greener and less dry ella, with more greenery, more water cooling by evaporation to curve extreme hate. these extreme hits of ugly to david urban planners and cas were, are already looking at ways the city can tackle climate change. one of their 1st projects is the redesign of the plaza site. the main station it's set to become much greener, which will not only make it more attractive, but also help protect the city from getting too hot. intellect didn't get this lands me for felix was eager to our cities are very built up. but the idea is that instead of being drained off to rivers by leading to flooding,
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water is retained in the cities a faster. that's what's called a sponge city. that meant man, i had a family that 1000000 auto as a landscape architect and urban planner. his munich base team was awarded to re design contract. construction is about to begin down. mm hm. yeah. it's a target love and as i am on, we're experiencing more very hot days on that, but also more heavy rainfall by lunch off. that's problematic enough in the countryside layman, but it's even more extreme in the cities on the 1st um, it can get unbearably hot in cities like causal. we're in the ryan valley tile. we have to cool down our cities and at the same time, mitigate the heavy rain for which is becoming more frequently and retain the water in the cities up so me on the plaza. so it's so high trees, fountains, and miss spray will help cool the plaza. farther walkways are permeable. water is
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a key design element. ah, well, if needed quick, we need to use every project to boost water retention in cities for plans, for cooling purposes, explaining we need to convert cities to what's called green and blue infrastructure to him, cause we're adopting the sponge that he concept to meet the climate change challenges of the future to innovation is essential. forester band had hamburger in the san vite is also looking for creative ways of maximizing water retention. just like roy on auto and kassawa, his name is to capture, distribute, and use watcher as efficiently as possible. mm. that then tried to buy these and my number is that we can now these are from what is crucial is that we make the call function of the forest or the focus of our efforts with user to boost water attention and increase its sponge function. vicodin via canada is
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a shameful to on shy gun. ah, there are grounds for optimism. we just need to adapt to changing weather patterns . that's what pans back mayor frank harsh tells people as he tours germany, raising awareness of flash blood was, well this morning we need action and improvement across the board. don't joined us . he said, i do believe that can walk through but a lot needs to happen before people like yoga and and marianna bowman are safe from the threat of flooding in the villages of vinto park pounds bah, and elsewhere. after a lot of hard work, the couple have almost finished rebuilding their home. yes. finally, we're making progress and we'll simply diamond the under floor heating has just
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been installed. mm. now the $1000000.00 question. where will the couch go to? not mine. are you asking me or my wife will leave that to them to figure out lou, but the couple did agree on tiling the floor tiles are more water resistant just in case ah. we allow ourselves to to move on close and tears tighter. well, oh, rethinking the world in a more poetic way? need be artist, exclusive interview with math feliciano. arts 21. in 30 minutes bandito
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lou ah. these places in europe or smashing the records, stepped into a bold adventure. it's the treasure map for modern globetrotters. discover some of you up to record breaking sites on google maps. and now also in book form. imagine how many portion of lunch us her in the world right now, the climate change. if any, off the story. this is my flex the way from just one week. how much was can really get we still have time to go. i'm going on with his subscriber all morning. he was like
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